Cancer diagnosis as a discipline has been greatly improved with the advent of tumor imaging technologies which use radiolabeled monoclonal antibodies or their fragments to target primary and metastatic lesions in not detected by standard MRI or CAT scans. Serum markers, which generally use monoclonal antibodies to tumor cell products, have also helped the clinician to quantitate the size of the tumor burden and this information has helped to determine the effectiveness of treatment at the completion of each course of therapy. What is lacking is a method which can monitor the efficacy of cytoreductive therapy (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or immunotherapy) during initial treatment to help the clinician know whether his/her chosen therapy is effective before a commitment to a given approach has been made. The ability to make this determination may enable clinicians to spare the patient undue toxicity if a given treatment approach appears unsuccessful and buy valuable time by enabling the therapist to switch to alternative treatment before actually completing each round of therapy. Imaging is an ideal tool for making this determination since it is non-invasive, rapid, and relatively inexpensive to perform. Our laboratory has developed a monoclonal antibody which targets necrotic regions in tumors and is especially effective in binding newly degenerating cells regardless of their cell of origin or disease status. In this proposal, we intend to construct a fast- clear derivative which after radiolabeling can be used to quantitative the amount of necrosis before and after therapy. Genetic engineering methods will be used to construct a single chain, diabody, and triabody derivative as well as F(ab) and F(ab')2 fragments of chimeric monoclonal antibody TNT-3. In vitro binding studies and in vivo biodistribution and imaging analyses will be used to determine which of the above constructs have the best imaging characteristics. At the completion of this phase of the work, in vivo tumor models consisting of chemotherapy resistant and sensitive tumor sublines will be used to demonstrate the potential of this approach to monitor the effectiveness of cytoreductive therapy. The results of these studies could provide the basis for future clinical trials by providing the nuclear medicine physician, oncologist, and radiation therapist with a new and valuable tool to assess the effectiveness of standard and experimental cancer therapy in a cost-effective and timely manner.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA083001-01
Application #
2904821
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-7 (M1))
Program Officer
Menkens, Anne E
Project Start
2000-02-01
Project End
2003-01-31
Budget Start
2000-02-01
Budget End
2001-01-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$285,443
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Pathology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
041544081
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90089
Jang, Julie K; Khawli, Leslie A; Park, Ryan et al. (2013) Cytoreductive chemotherapy improves the biodistribution of antibodies directed against tumor necrosis in murine solid tumor models. Mol Cancer Ther 12:2827-36
Khawli, L A; Hu, P; Epstein, A L (2008) Cytokine, chemokine, and co-stimulatory fusion proteins for the immunotherapy of solid tumors. Handb Exp Pharmacol :291-328
Khawli, Leslie A; Hu, Peisheng; Epstein, Alan L (2005) NHS76/PEP2, a fully human vasopermeability-enhancing agent to increase the uptake and efficacy of cancer chemotherapy. Clin Cancer Res 11:3084-93
Biela, Barbara H; Khawli, Leslie A; Hu, Peisheng et al. (2003) Chimeric TNT-3/human beta-glucuronidase fusion proteins for antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy (ADEPT). Cancer Biother Radiopharm 18:339-53
Khawli, Leslie A; Alauddin, Mian M; Hu, Peisheng et al. (2003) Tumor targeting properties of indium-111 labeled genetically engineered Fab' and F(ab')2 constructs of chimeric tumor necrosis treatment (chTNT)-3 antibody. Cancer Biother Radiopharm 18:931-40
Khawli, Leslie A; Biela, Barbara; Hu, Peisheng et al. (2003) Comparison of recombinant derivatives of chimeric TNT-3 antibody for the radioimaging of solid tumors. Hybrid Hybridomics 22:1-9
Khawli, Leslie A; Biela, Barbara H; Hu, Peisheng et al. (2002) Stable, genetically engineered F(ab')(2) fragments of chimeric TNT-3 expressed in mammalian cells. Hybrid Hybridomics 21:11-8